I1QWPUQ 2 c (T l’ ‘l “lllQVll Th‘. Preiililt Charlottetown liuatdion ‘ul. W. (‘hi-afar S. il. K. lluriwll. F. 1r llirtwtur ll. If. llurllrtl F. J. I. alt-Lure J-l till» Editor llllll \ 1 Ltillonul mule: I Ridcr flaggilrd llicd this dellc, 19:5. __"* i1 ll ‘rm-f cuARixirrr-rnlvw GUARDIAN doles By The Way History will have much to aayl The Ceremony as Seen From the Abbey Gallery __ _ > . _ _ _ _ iatow. so exlraordinal-y an episode A.:\'i|'r'iul':t',l;|:ii'i:i'b' i-'.....]."ll'l'.li'.'.'l'ill-Ti"? iii ingl- 1'=1-~'1-1 dlflillllm ~11) uul 111W 1l1'111"\'1'11\'.\ '- l l“ 111" “my °1 111° 3111M Crown- —~ " W” ' ' v spontaneous dclllollsirzltiuu lif ]tl_\‘tlll_)' lull] soli- lull‘ hlsmhll lull Lryl” he ml] And. (By Thomas T. Champion) klltrllllljg |||\ ltl-l ll mm $1.00 nor year (In advance) darn); h slollchl lhllillesh l5 l-mpflssll-lle m] ll '“\0'Pr|| ill, . 0 ‘WI: m" lin ‘iuhullvlrl mailed t» * ,1‘ y‘ gwhleve at. this time. We are still] """" 'L"'1'l'i'l'ii'1'l|ll ‘llllllltilmlllllltl"rlilllzrrlglllt: " "um FH-‘Icnlj- 1h . . , , ' ~ l]... P ‘gléghfotgotldosgfi me even.“ The iCanadian Press Staff Writer) The whole great congregation _ _ ‘_ _ i C 11H} >.\>1Hll 111 l" “"112 F11 _ , 1° 11¢ of Windsor is, coupon. May 1z.— (C. P.) - arose when the procession of Their iRli'H'"?"L“.’ H. 1937 wiucial iltcoilic tax is nut so snnpjl- H, n pinks lTlffhfd 111 1119 111111115 01a few PBOPIB- ‘Without doubt it was all true Royal Highnesses of the blood _,_-_- .._,...._.. ilslht; LiI]\'('f|‘|]]1Q|1[l]a\'g punpnnt-q n, hnfudut- H‘? ‘Pgmds "ml <19¢111IW1118 m about was o! thousands M Qvr- royal! was heralded- The mm {U a _e r {l o ouu secrets. Without the in- onation observers passing the night , Princess Royal attired in The T.- “jer prubhgm 1' l a ' . lolmallll" 111111 may not be availab‘: away in the parks 0r streets. ls h i m m c r l n g white. her ‘ _ I ‘ ‘ * * * 110 i111‘ historian for generations it is Nevertheless one of the humblest train born; by two ladies. had at --—**—""'" '1 lit-u: hxtjfiilfilltill’; the Ljlncrutir-Gcileru] aul.’ (‘:l"l°111*1.\£ quite mpd-sible to arrive of the personaxles dlefitinfid to witl- each side Their blghaijestielsfihildrenz. if w. ill ll] Pit l-l llll- lllwclliptitt-ut of the: 1 Lldv 'i'\\'t‘f'(.lsllillil' are vi~ilul \" ' B ":]l a a ‘"5 "a "mm" °1 "'19 Duke 0f ess today's soernn ty in Wes- Princesses Elza- an argare. - l c _ . . _ . _ g . t“ ruusuic _. . v v tum“, H“ m ‘ l, p,._,\,m_‘,\ m‘, rwumik, . ' \. V’ ._ .' > v _ _ “Yjlldsfti s life and reign. because we iiiinster Abbe) found the journey walking as gravely as any o! their - t, 1| ilnlli . lml bcotla next ulliuth. “lldl about out mmlm measure factors m" um thither from Londons lil-ntile elders. l-i .lu'.. ll..:‘l-- \\]]] ~]ilii"l]\ bccllulc a problem Province? known. oii-cilmstances still sur- outer suburban ring at five a. 111., l... l; u, ..-';.l,- p“... n," (“Had-H and , ,, t ‘rounded with deep mystery._Mp,n-‘oi1e of the easiest ever under-‘ M593’ h h°h°ld°l w“ hlweh l” ' - - - . . . . chcster Guarrlia taken. Whit may 11¢ called hhlllled 11TH] F? '1~ ‘l’ "1"i‘l'1'*' 11111141111‘ I> ll dlllc- Prcullcr Lalllpbcl] is not livcrhujtctu] uf tllc ‘ ' on me tube were was less tenderness in watching these lulu! rlllr’ will! ll\ llll lli-llllb Lcllguc of I filluilcul] assistance he is going to vct fruill Regina is the on] .5; f crush than on most ordinarvlyflllhg ‘lhlldrell lmnvlnfl 5° 1h‘ , ,, .». , , __ ; _ . M , _ I _ =- _ ‘ y! ywesto the . ~‘ nocentl in a spectacle of such L. l . . l. \ll.il l].|~ iu.ltl<l Llttiu-i this clr but inlllliilc lhil Uillt‘ hard- 6198i Lakes to adon d i it llllslhe“ hlhlhlhgs- the bus “Th” g I M‘ ‘I I V‘ I” _ I ' ‘l _. I i l . >~ t .- mg [mm out on m; bofiyléggi sgiill- and me “promising weather ,m_ momen’. man-aging their own lit. .l , lu. .ul li itlll .u Mliilttlllg .ui(] sonic jircplllatllly wurk on tlii lowing Drama‘ ,h e55’ ' doubtedly causing many middloltle trains far naturally they 1‘--‘l' " ’ '11‘ 111t~Il11'41.\‘l '1']11'_\' zlrc lruads will be utidcrlzlkcu before \\'l'illt.'l‘ conic» down for onivblllfcfiiieniiiitiitsein gee? ‘lass Lmldmlers" especially lhmlwem mo young w have tram- lll: \\ l~i~~lili< flu. lbl- i]l'l\'i‘f‘ tli folk.“ would pron-l;- a nqkffifi wlth children. to remain at homtallwa-‘els °l thell‘ °wh- _. , ~. ., I l . _ ,I .~ , ._ _ . ‘l. " .* . _ _ lllglit.-Windsoi' star v e Reaching the farther end of the! The“ hunks‘ the Dllchllsles or ll . u]. .l.il ].llv\ .llL' Hill .l - ]]i.lt .\_\dllc_\, Lil.’ is l-iljollugliuw-niltcl] Pr\i\ [ ‘ . Hube journey one found poncpleloueester and Kent’ and many \ .~ l .\' lllikllj; ~ll]]. l]il~_l zlrc |R'l‘ll_\ l> cvtdcllccl] b_\ tbl- tact tllzlt lllt‘ ]'li>t-]\'l~ l p|,,-,-§nfl,,,-1,. is "u. grea‘esl ha“ arrangements so faultless the walk “h” Pllhlleshs °l lllweh mhkmlo" ~ l1 ' 1 " 1"‘ 1~ u" 111M‘ iul" lllclu uu curd has found it Zl(i\'].\'2<lll]t‘ to ill>lilll a ncw 1911i“) vl-orkml} toward intpynatjlgna]: to the Abbey was a. pleasure. Manylltlgwellll h ltl; ‘tgWEPlhQPh seéhrlicllhle ,_ l . ,__, -»Y __ , _,_ l, ' ] . - - rog e care. e ncess l . t ..l l. .l._\ .lul ‘\.]llljt~ til) not prullltu, |)I't.~> \\illL]l lllflls out 13.000 jilljltis ll llgllggrlfiggg ‘zglldi H" ".1 “hflllllllllll- exallsdlflgkéagglefig mrélinlggdsmeg Roy‘; and he; moms remained go,- “ . , l, \_,...,, H“, w“, _..| H I‘ p _ l p lll ernatlonalsm andvuhus a _a . e . P 1 . .l.. . _\ .. l t.“ il.-in. t» tilui dll llllll’. ls illlflillbllllg to create a fierce and demcratlc way to reach ltheir ‘he 11m‘? b91118 °l1 61111111» P9116118 .: l ll . * i i, llriflamprrlmising German nafjqngl. places. In these early hours the lhe mlvhl °l Que“ Man“ 1.x ll‘ . ' i 'l "Vi u- '\1ii~il z-i wlilliis llnc- .\Iziilv in Mlmcton the mcnlbcrs of tllc police forcc lsm" l" ‘hls 111“ l5 fi£3111111£l 11 105i"! "1111 held °lll once "m1 the we“ mus of of the [r .‘ ‘ ‘. u‘ ' . W _ ._ - v H _ . I . ‘ . |_ .1 f l RIHO siqlliusl thc inevitable trend The exterior of the grey old l°l"ls hhd ladle‘ and 98°91? m“ . .v .l .l . .ll ._..ltl llk~i Sllllllllf‘. dpplwrtl] m tlc Lurlinwtilln jmmll lll the ll- o; cj,-,;,Z,,U(,n_ The“, am "nedmp church was we“ mgh hidden in when Queen Mary. a truly regal ‘ l" ' - - :l ll l zuzll l] tllvi cliuu- ; lowing uutfit: khzlki uiliiilruls. mu khaki shirts lagautst him a glowing realization bvlthe enormous awnings and stands. llgllre Wllh the broad 53511 °l the _ . ll ~llurcl~~ of \\.ltl-r 't:lu SilUL'.\ llud blzlck tics. This l5 t0 bc lhcir Fl‘ 31"“ ‘i’l'11l1“il1' “1111111011 rlcstiiiy. the The latter. even before six A. M. ghfilorydgzléfiafnmhlliizhsehxftigli? u ' _ _ _ . _ ' 4 . _ . _ H H ._ _ .. ‘ .' rr-iir 0 cruczition a ltl uh“ k- l ct .ltl ill , th i ll - ] l . u . ll lll lit illl iiilllllllllllllt> cilkltillri llljfs~ tur siullnlll wlur this _\(lll. Ilu n“. of H“, world boégusew Zf"inm_ legal 35$]? Qflngoeisegslflitlfonelininglf lluohlflahled by U18 Queen of Nor- " lrllltl p].ll'v l0 llliltT. dcpllrturc l> l1(‘\\'_ since in otlicl _\c:ll'.~ llic tt':ll- iflffltfillfllilfi in transportation. Were 111g with the sound of trgmplnz WHY- .'l I\'ll'.]l‘<'l] ti» bl- CJH‘ Ii fic puliccllizlii only were gzlrbcd in kliuki in llgpr," no “gomhl “'°lkl118 toward the horses on the sanded and salted Th ___ w \\lll<‘l' lllli] lllilk t]li'\ >llilll1l€f- i,.g,','l,loi,-i,,'l',f.',ij'i»Sjigtiinifffiuiiohal: Loads and the jingle or cavalry e now‘ I. “Ga” . 1 . ~ rrl . s l 'li'l‘~ lil disc-aw. [he i g i 2v the iogc of economic events. hi? through the 1mg canvas The Princess Royal and the lit- l l, l .up...._,_ l. ... .1‘ _ 3 . _ _ _ . oriutiatclvthc agency exists and 15 d; w by, t tle Princesses curtsied low as p ‘ M’ “ill-ls Vi‘ t-"l, f1 _ .\ftcr_ lllc \\ edncsllu) s crlrouwtirm, Lotldliil ,h,,,.(,-m.,. Hm. H,,“,,._,.a,5ing a leflrllltlhaenceslegnehgfound ‘Eledarergglfi this gmty F“; 13d” attended by : ‘l l“ U M1 l" ltsclf \\l]] ]ll'i\'L' dlltitll('l‘——-Zl]] ll> i>\\'ll——~;lt'\‘lll'l]lil}.1 clenched and puny fist against thg her exalted suite, passed up the ' ~ Kl lull, 9" ~ ‘ to The Dzlilv 'l'c]egraph. which says: "(bl Aug ._.___§_______._ 5 the ncw Muster zliid \\'."lrdcils of lbc \\'0r I _ >ilijlilll Louljialiv of Girdlcrs will be cruwilcd Jillirliliinllil Candidates with the nucir-nt cmbroirlercl] crowns 0f tltt- Ctllll ,'__ ‘ w _ puny iii :l Ct‘l'('lll(ll'l_V which ]lzl< clluligci] litth- iii l " ‘ "' """" l’ l """ll"" -“l¥‘-""1~$ 111111 1f 4111 400 _\'t';lr.<, and which i5 conductor] tu lht‘ illllfiit‘ 1"‘ "l ‘l ""11 1111'] “‘"11<‘11 111111 If“ of an 0k] lizluibliis and flutes." l“ r llll-u .lul] \\ItlllI‘l] who ]ll'l\'t' ])('(‘ll * * * i‘ l ' vlvlllu- L'4lll~l]'l]l('|l('l('.\' ill Uri» In Nzlssllil. Bahamas, thcv arc a llivzll and lu l 'l'_ “h” "]""l"‘1 l" 1111' 1~<'.‘~11>1-'1lilr(* 0n pntrilitit: pl-lijill 'I\\~(i shuns iliul lllcludvii phutli- y ' l l ‘llll l” “l’l" l" ll"l‘1 a (‘1111111111111 grzljihs ilf tlic Duke of \\'iul]sln' iii thcir wiildllw 1 ‘ l‘ l 111*111111<' 1'1 vlullfllllll~i~ uli ilic 111111? 'L'li>ji]ll_\'s rcmlivcl] the jiictlirl-s \\']l('|l sl-vcral] pru- lu l illtl-l‘, l) "l". “ll "lllllll "l l]l"ll' l" '11" Tlllllllllg >11 ed. flue of the (lisplavs was in the window of l“ 11'4"“ "1' l""ll ‘l‘]"‘ 1'1"] 111 111" 1111111110 thr- office 0f an American reallrvr and the other . l1“ l"""l’l"‘lll"“ ""'1l‘l111*"1 10111‘ 111¢1111>Ef$ windmv wzls in the shop of a Nassau merchant \\ . ill-ll glllll; lllili jilllilics. hull tlUYUlfid 1h.- with an Anwrican “Ha llr llllrl lli Y]l(‘]l' lilllc ill lll‘\\‘.~jliljlt'f' wurk. 1' V 1' “'1' llli‘ lhlllllll‘ l"‘“l"l' "l 111" Sllfl-‘ll .—\ speciallv dcsigtlcd public-address system (ll 'l]\"*.- ;l \\l]]>]\llil\\ll writer ou nature “n,- inttajjfli in \\‘@5t|niii§f@r ;\l)ilt‘_\' for tllc l','l" ' W] l"""' “"l"' lll- 1111111 -\"1"-'1l~€l’ "1 Coronation. This iustzllllliiuii nizldc it jiussibli: tul- lull. all i’ i,\‘lil]\']'. .\]r- (Jul-nu .\1\I1'1'11_\' '1' fur tlii‘ 7-300 distiiliiuishcc] Klicsts to hczlr dis- "l,"l".'i'l lllhl ll]? Uliw- ]']i\ll]l'l of Pcalcc Rivcr. tiuctlv cverv word 0f {l cortinzltiuu ccrculliltv fur ‘lll M” "_l"' l“ lll" “llllllll! hgllllh thc first time in the histrlrv 0f tin-at liritziiii. .1" fllhllllml‘ ""' "l""l'l'\i"ll\"“‘ 1'1"“ lllllllllllnfill Thc technical difficulties in' thc acoustic disad- Tlll‘. 1. .\. 1.111!‘ 0f tlll- iirzuu] ]"l.lrk> full/flit‘- vantugcs uf a medieval church wcrc livcrcuiiir: N“ l1‘ l‘ ll‘ l\"‘l‘l"~ l"""""l'l.\' "1 111" \'1¢1<*1'111 .b\' this nuvcl svstcui. 1n jilnce of a limited num- l"l"lll‘l "lhl :1“ .1' >\- 1"'1l"ll- 1"’11111‘T1_\' 11f 1111' lbcr of burn loud-qietlkcrs. tratistiiittitig :lt a high ]'l-iiil tirt-y 1i7]Lk‘ll\‘f ]\lll](‘ jlllirllzllislil‘ candi- lll“ "ll lll" l“l"'l""l ‘l‘l" “lll l“' l1“ 1-‘11115 1-“ speakers were used. but at a lmv intensity. ll-‘lllllllllfl llf lJlIVJIV], .\lI'.\, H. l". Hodges of * i, * \]('llll']l'l, mil] .\'ll'. .\il‘] llrvllll uf .\'0rt]l Yzlll- I|~|-|n]igfg[|'nn m (jannljn, \\'i'[ig‘l] nt nnu time cmlwl" Ml“ li- “h .1"llll-‘"11 "1 1"~‘l111“11‘1-‘~ reached fllilid proportions, (]\\'ill(]]€‘(i t0 a uicrc l""‘"' l1 1'1“1'111" -“"]"'1'1"1' 111 \'-'1111"’11\"'1~ 15 1111 1111‘ trickle last your whctl 12.013 pcliplc sl-tllcl] ili CtlliClél] Libcrzl] czilulidzltc in fliirnzlby. h a Canada's Relief Bill Records il>\(‘ll‘.]l]('(‘l by the Rank of Canada allow tliht Domiuiriii. Provincial and .\illl1iCi]‘t5<ll exicildiliivcc l-u llllPlll ilrivnlcilt rclicf have‘ a - ] ] . _ E grl-Qail-l] npprllxuiirltcly $300,000.000 in the p.'lst a 0 \('l'll'~~ ']bl- tutu] zit the cud of .\l:irch l fi B . 03 was §11_2_Z_¢vwl.r><tfl. and 0n the bllsis 0f an esti- mate nmdc rcccmll- by the Nlinistcr 0f Finance the country. lc indicated that the \\'ill(llt\\'> illight bc >illll>ll~ energy lcvc]. no lcss than 120 moviug-clii] loud- 1460111198“ t0 $115K 1/119 5101 11111911111“ immigration iu thc last twli years as been the lowest siucc tfotlfedcmticin. In ddition to the r2023 foreigners who ciilcrec! Canada. 5.064 (‘nuadiatls rcturned to tlicir n.1- tive land from the. [fnitcd Stntcs. immediately bcforc. the war wcrc the biggest jdramatist‘ years i_n Canada's history for immigration. and ,1 in lqlj; the all-time peak 0f 400.000 immigrants = Thc years rrived. in l()_1,0 the arrivals totalled 104.000 rid since then have been less than 30,000 each year. l I 1i (h? [tnninilnl hn- slllff’ flit-u pllifi out $8Q,- Australia is milking elaborate platis for lhc ponfmo nut] luwlviuvizl] and Xlunicipzl] bodies an Celebration of its 150th anniversary between ("l'|lli\'?l]l‘ill Flitlillilll for rclil-t‘ pllrptises. Thcse January 26 and .'\j)l'il 25. i938. Plccurrliug to =1 fiuurcs. \\']1il'h arc authoritative and should be preliminary announcement by tbc cnmnlittcc in crirrcct. du nut rcflcct any tapering down 0f "rclictm to clii'l‘1'*l""ltir] with improved economic 0f 8V€Y1l5 These include a historical and water pagctlnt. conditions .\n fiiillav of Slfiooooxim to com- hrlt llll(‘lll]llt'1\lll"lll ill ihc grcnt rccuvcry year 3 charge, which has already scheduled a Irmg list for the entertainment of tourists. nd inspiring cavalcade 0f Australia's march t0 which l-ulll-r] a lllltlllll .'lgr-_ <ccln< an cnurmous- "fltlftnlmfid- 1111 lmprebhl"? halal» nlllllllr)’ allll iv cll-tlv rciivclly for an cconrinlic rlisteulpcr P1 which \\l‘ arc asked to believe has almost pass- ed away, Offensive Tactics Costly Discu>=inq rhc ebb and flflw nf t-he fortunes of urn- in Spain. tlic London Times utters a f cautiliu :iq:liil~i nli-"Inking a big offensive drive n. f'\]1]f‘||l‘t' nf ~llllt‘l‘lllj‘ strength. 0r progress. lvr (‘\<‘ll llll]lll'll‘V\' \\]~(ilill’l_ Thc cxjicriencc of a t-hc lircat \\':ir, it <;l_v~. as wcll] as the long view 0f what ]"l.'l> lwlpjicilcd in Spain. justifies the (uncut-inn that rlkfPllilVl‘ <tratcg_v' is always more P('ltlllllllll'.'ll nut] gl-iu-lnlllv shrlwvdcr than offen- SH!‘ lil<'i]\'~. ']']u- it l-].'liln- i~ przlcticiilarly ap- plir-"lbli- t0 llll utluitil-n in Fpuin ivhcre. how- cvcy. "rl-lllivclv ~nl:l]] furccs in vast nrcas offcr flit‘ luizlvk lullrl: ~l"upi- {lllil a hcttl-r chance than rm illc l"]<~~i~]_v ]13l"]<(‘1'i \\l'\i('l'll front." In cml- r scljill-til-c 0f ]]]]\_ ill!’ Tinli-s ~.'l'\~, thcrc have burn a fl-w "l'l'l'll~l\l' \ll(‘(‘l‘\~(‘~_ "gained mainly Canada's largest market for Douglas fir ties. b} lllilllill‘ll\l‘l'—.' X"\'(‘l‘lil('il‘\~ it adds: * 1* * "lint llill‘ll~l\'il'~. by I'Ii]lf'1' sidl- have in gen- In the Law Court of Ririm. France. a sen- crzllbilll ~iu.|]] lillvri in prupurilliti ilt lll(‘ll' cost eatirm was caused rrcently by a law-yer named m lltc. .\ul]. l\1‘ll \\]|l'll zi ]1Il‘l'll tuum] break- .\Ir_ BCSMH], who was allcgcd t0 have stolcrl 4"“ 11 11"‘ 1_""1""111"1"1.\' 1‘_1"111'1"1 111" Hliflflflfffi l from the prosecution the only ilocumctitary evid- ‘ jmlll. P.\'j_ti'l‘l'*l ("P vllll~ ufllllll CO-llflfillcf] lllilt 0f , encg they had again“ him in 3|] gggmiyjting @350, , rue urlr in ~]l]!\\lllQ lbsll ciiluhtlntls act n term ‘and who conducted his 0\vn dcfmce with a f!) tlll-ir ll't\\t'l'~ n] cvpluititig il. In inking tbP vehcmcncc and even violence that created an up- nffvli-inl- czlcb ~l4it' was clubarkiug rm a vcn- roar. denying, on the witness stand cvcn, that furc “ll-MP utllll-zl] fliuudzltilius wcrc unsound. he was guilty- Then when thc Court and ev- alid v/ll-r- >il‘lllil‘r CllilllCl" 0f any jgrcut cffcct e in)‘ ill ill‘ p-vrlililiigilvl] <jl]ll'l'f‘ — ill ihf‘ POSSi- e Iiilily i]:'i tlzc uppnticuis might be ripc fur a "Plrill cnllhljwc‘. (ll‘il€‘l'\\l\f‘. a hr-avv sacrifice 0f f luc will. llllli- o. ’i'ltl'l\' w:l< tlic prnbzlblc- rcsull." projected lines. firm schedule referred to will mean an animal ing replacemctits. it" force review, an anniversary regatta. C0111- memorative church services. Australasian power boat championships. an anniversary jockey club meet. a horse carnival, a band championship, a national baseball tournament, a. police pageant and many other events. III ii i The importance of keeping the Pacific frce m- international trade is evidenced by the fact China. the world's greatest market f0r rail- way material, offers a valuable outlet for Can- dian timber. such as railway ties. bridge timber, 81c. In the matter of ties, there must be rough- ly 16.000000 in Iinos now operating (2.500 to the mile) many of which will necd replacing: 8.000.000 are being laid or due to hellaid in the next four or five years. ivhilc another l8.- 000000 will he required for the completion of The present yearly construc- eqtlirctlietit 0f 2.500.000 tics without consider- Siilcc li)_;_;'('hiila has been rybncly connected with the case wcrc exhaust- d and nonpluscd, he conly pulled thc titissing l stubs from his pocket and declared he had been doling. .\ doctor, subsequently testified that l .\lr. Bcssml was a hot-head, excessively vain. a T7155 pnllll of vIl-lv throws some ucw light on nntl/rious hnaxer. but believed thcrc wcrd n0 '1'" 11"" -’-".'"'l'firl'lilt ritrli sccuiillulv tvititradictnry |"l’-"""-" "f l-‘li- Fpmiiedi civil wnix-qtnniclv llic """ ""l_l"'1“‘1 "1' W"! FITP-‘l? by the Fascists in F 1"" "f"'l”"‘ ""1?" "ilfl illt-ir failure to capturi- ]\l.ll]rid zlflcr storming it for over 6 monthg, rats in his garrcf. with the pursuit 0f politics?" bc was “Do such qualifies intcrfcrc askcd. ouudlv and solcnmly he answered: ‘Not a bit." \\'ilh which lipinon he may Icavc thc court room "without a strain on his character." .» I forccs which wilI nnc day sweep him a\\3_\—~kl'if>\\'S that it is the church. -—Hamiiton Spectator. Zlriostof us musl. have wondered at sonic tlml- or other how it came about that harbors display red. blue and whitc sfrlpcd poles OUioidE their shops. It is pollted out that the Inca! harbor uscd to be the local surgcon. where patients were bled and bandaged. The pole was the symbol of tilt‘ splint to which a broken arm was bound. the Willlt! stripc l'0],)l‘l‘S£“il(1l‘l the bandages. the iue the veins that had to be open- ed and the red the blood.—Kitchen- er Record. The League would be stronger for prevention of war if it. did not in- ciudc nations who believe in and en- gage in war. refusing to submit lhor disputes to any process of im- partial arbitration. The League Wflllifi be strong cnough to provida coiective security. without the membcrshij) of Germany and Italy, if its loyal mclnbers stood together. —Ex. While many. municipalities. are, figuratively. tearing their hair over the quest on oi the slot machine evil. lhc little town of Preston has found ihc solution by clapping on a $1.000 fine on those who offend. are out of Preston and will stay out as long as the by-iaw authorizing the heavy penalty remains in ef- fecL-Guelpli Mercury. 1t is rclalcd of the late John Diilikwatcr. the playwright. that he hnwked his famous play. Abraham Lincoln?‘ to cvery producer in Lon- don. without success. Finally he managed to have :t produced at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre. 1 where it made an instantaneous hit. l and hc was hailed as England's HEW The experience shows that experts do not always KYWW their own business and also that atmosphere. Courteous officers known as gold sticks-in-waiting, werg at every comer. . My card entitled me to seat in the north transept of the triforlum. so with many a man in scarlet. blue or gold and many a lady in ruiment as sumptuous and with feathers in her headdress, we made the long trail up the spiral staircase. The climb took the breath. A Pislah-Like View Our breath was taken again when we had gained the triforium and looked upon the interior of trhe Abbey. gaining a plsgah-liko viiew of its wonders. Almost to the great rose windows. Galleries were reared. decked in o, chaste scheme of blue and gold. The great-space below. where the transepts join the choir and sanctuary. a space usually known as the "lantern." was cuti- verted into what for the Corona- tion is known as the theatre. This was covered with a golden-colored carpet so thick ones heels literally sank in it. (I had the privilege of tiflvlng it n. few days earlier). Upon this was a. dais, with a crimson chair for the Kng ap- short stairway to a gallery re- served on the south side of the sanctuary. Latter the Princess Royal and the Princesses sat on Queen Mary's immediate left. The younger Princess often strained her little head over the gallery to put a question to her aunt at her side. but Queen Mary seemed t0 prefer to watch things by herself. Then we heard the volley of the ' Abbey bells and the fanfare of trumpets heralding the coming of the King and Queen. The Dukes of Gloucester and Kent, their robes hiding their uniforms, entered the theatre first. after which there was a pause. broken by the entry of a brilliant company of t/urbaned Indian officers. Then the procession proper be- 88h with the Abbey beadle at- tired in his customary quit of solemn black. the King's domestic chaplalm wolre the livery of an ordinary Anglican priest and the representatives of the free churches, who came behind them. were less conspicuous. 'l"hen followed .coior in plenty, with such functionaries as blue- mantle pursuivarit and theorrlders of the great Orders of Knlghthood. From such- a height as the north proaclicd by five steps. To the left. approached by three steps. thus making it on a lower level. was a similar chair for the Queen. Before these. and a few feet nearer the sanctuary. was the historic Coronation chair in which every monarch has been crowned since Edward I. The only time the chair was removed from the Ab- bey was when Oliver Cromwell was installed as Lord Protector in Westminster Hall. The chair. with its dull brown painting. looked a homely article, as indeed it is. for in days gone by it suffered severely at the hands 0f t advertising pays. The BirminBhBlm presentation was a grcat advertise- mcnt.—lw;intrcal Gazette. The little incident at a Swinburne commemoration meeting at the end of which the chairman infolmcd a speaker that he was “£91118 011 much too 1on2" may Well raise 1188111 the question whether a tactful way of stopping a long-winded orator has ever been discovered. “A Saint in the pulpit" said a gush ng Wom- an to Bishop Stubbs after he had been suffering under a. very .0118 serlrlorl. "And a martyr in the pew!" g r o a n e d Stubbs. — Maricheslvfil‘ Guardian. The basic difficulty is a genuine shortage of skillcd labor in the building trades. Practically I10 11P- pventlce carpenters. masons. brick- layers, etc.. have been tlfit 116d 191' years. Moreover many skilled work- ers ln these trades found themscli/EB forced to take up some other oc- cupatlon during the prolonged de- pression in building activity-QT starve-so they are no Ionger avail- able. The shortage is now being ser- iously fclt for the first tune.- Brandon Sun. ‘Ilse aeroplane “Divine Wind." which tl-u. Tokyo in Japan on Avril a. reached crawler; on 111° 111°1- noon of the 9th. Time for the 10.000 miles was 95 hours. The actual flY- ing time about 50 hours. T116 811111911 brought suitable greetltiis 101’ 511° Coronation-London Times. A poorly dressed man was stand- ing in front of a vacant, store build- mg, and from her window above the stole a. woman noticed that Sever!" people stopped. in passlnfl land lave him some money. It was a scent? that touched hcr deeply. 511° wmlfj on a p ccc of paper. "Take Courage. placed thc papcr in an envelope with a. ‘$2 bill and tossed it to the man. Scvcral days later when 511B was rotulning from an out-Of-YDW" visit, she was accosted by 1-119 1111"‘- wlin said: "Here's your $52. jafiyl ‘Take couraae‘ won at. 26 to i. — American Legion Magazine. The dispute was. or was reputa- ented to be. over the question of whether Canadian employees are entitled to go on strike under dir- ection of foreign leaders. "as tafnrs‘ they were called. How thlfi 158116 fared in the settlement la obscure. Nor is it vita ly important. For the reason this is not a _, that can be settled by the terms of the agreement. It has been already aet- tled, by long standing practice- Edmonton Bulletin. It has been determined definitely that George Skeet, Britain's moat vandals. Probably its arms had been ite-uphoistered for today's ceremony. ,_ On the credence table to the south of the sanctuary. was dis- posed the Abbeys communion gold plate. gleaming with a lichessness worthy of the Temple of Solomon. The floor space and the gal- leries began to fill rapidly. A great bank of ermine in the south transept betokened the presence of peers and away on the north sldo their wives offered a sweeping stretch of white and gold, with an infinity. it seemed. of veiling and feathering and gems sparkling in- termittently from many a tiara. In the galleries albove were His Majesty's judges in full bottomed wigs and robes of gold or black. Windsor uniforms. Court uniforms and Privy Councillor uniforms struck the eye. both on the level and above ground. And amidst this try-gone but still living pre- sentatlon of past eras. an appropri- ate. if hardly harmonious, note of things more modern was provided in the uniforms of the Salvation Army and the Royal Air Force. v Even o. wait of three hours pas-fled quickly in such surround- ings. with the comings and goings of the great officers of state. the taking up of positions by stalwart, plumed officers of the King's Bodyguard. and the passing of the Archbishops of Canterbury‘ and York with their primatlal crosses carried before them. .. Med lloval Plgealltry The first combined element o: mediaeval pageantry came in the ceremonial of the bringing in of the regalla by the Dean and Pre- bendaries of Westminster, preced- ed by the choir. First came the "Children of the Chapels Royal," otherwise chorlswrs in their long gold-braided tudor coats. followed by the Abbey and other choirs in surnllce and cassocks of red. The scholars of Westminster School, who were to fulfil their customary prerogative of greeting the sovereign with cries of "vim:- came with them. The Dean a-ore a cope of gold and the prebendarlm copes of . To the petitions of the Lltany, sung unaccompanied. This proces- sion passed through the nave to the western entrance. where the urilblems ofmrvaitvwerehandedw thawpeers destined to bear them in remarkable oantenarlan. who died at Burnham Market recently. was 104 years old. He leaves three sons, aged B9. 00 and 0. and a daughter not yet three. He was married the second time at 92 to a girl of Ill- Chronicle Telegraph. trlforlum and with such a galaxy of notalblllt-‘es it was difficult to idemify individual members. The Standard at Camdl Hon. Vincent Massey High. Com- missioner in London. bore the standard of Canada amidst a cluster of similar dominion em- blems. And 30 yards or so down the line was Prime Minister MacKenzie King of Canada, walk- ing with Prime Minister Joseph Lyons of Australia. and im- medlately behind Prime Minister Baldwin. who was followed by Ramsay MacDonald. Lord Presid- ent of the Council. ‘The lord High Chancellor's board genial visage was readily distinguished beneath his full bot- tlomed wig, and in due order of precedence the Archbishop 0f Canterbury came immediately be- hind. Then followed officers with the Queen's i-egalia. And then the Queen. supportod on each side by the Bishop of Blackburn and the Bishop of St. Albans. Six young ladies carried the Queen's train. Herr fvfajesty made a picture of loveliness in ivory- tinted satin which was the Dom- inicn tone oi’ most femlnlng dries amohst the high-born. The Queen's brown head was bare and amidst all the regal splendor of adornment a touch of simplicity seemed to be offered in her ear- rings of pearl. Very slowly she moved between the ranks of fascinated beholders in the nave and on to the theatre. Then another fanfare and the King's high attendants —the Lord Grealt Chamberlain. the Lord High Steward. the High Constable 0f Scotland. The High Constable of England and others with a bewildering endownment of title and ralmentr-heralded the ap. proach of the Sovereign himself. Arrayed in crimson and gold, he made a really noble figure. bear- ing himself in these tense mo- merits with a grave dignity which must havq appealed to au from the four corners of the earth behold- lng it. Meanwhile the choir burst forth into the stirring strains of Perry's "I was glad." The Servloollogiru With every mum-be of this Aug- ust congregation rightly disposed, the Coronation service proper be- am. The first spoken worth came with the part of the wlemony known as the recognition. Th; great procession, having Passed up the body of the church. and the King and Queen having taken seat in their chairs of staid on the south side of the altar. the voice of the Archbishop was heard for the first time: "Bil-s. I hen present unto you Geome- your undoubted King: wherefore all you who an; com this day to do your homage and service. are you willing tn do the some?" Four time did his Grace 0f Canterbury thus exhorit the as- sembly. flrstly from the east side of the theatre. then in succession from the south, west and north. The King meanwhile stood up in his chair and turned himself to the beholden: at each point. H18 Young. keen face looked verv nave While the venerable henrl or ] l MAY 14, 1937 ' suns of QUALITY . $1350 At this price we are of. fering suits worth do]. lars more. They 1m imported English ivorst- ed and noted for long wearing qualities. Am] of course they are styj. ed for the “particular dresser.” See this great week-end $1 special at — More New Sports Suits at — — — — — — —- spectators piled in great. banks of galleries roar-hing almost to the Abbey's groincd roof. At every One of these cxhori.a.t.inn.s the people, as hidden by the rlbric, “signified their willingness and joy by loud and repcated acclamntlons," all within one voice crying out: “God Save King George." And when the cries had ceased the trumpets sounded a brilliant finale to these loyal acclamations- Departure From Custom Contrary to the usage at hi; father's crowning. the King re- mained in the sanctuary as the Archbishop moved in the direction of the various compass points. At his father's Coionation the King accompanied the Archbishop to each point. The ceremonial presentation at the altar of the Bible, patch and chalice and of certain articles of the regalih. took up some minutes. The regalia was presented by the Lords who huvc carried it in tlic procession and it was the prerogative of the Dean of West- minster to receive all these ap- purtenances and to place them upon the altar. Then came the administration by tlic Archbishop of the Corona- tion Oath. ‘ "Sir. ls your Majesty willing to take the oath?" And the King answered in a clear voice: “I am Willing." Archbishop: "will you solemnly DrOmi-se and swear to govern the Peoples of ‘Grant Britain, Ireland. Canada. Au-ti-nlia. Nclv Zcaland and the Union of South Africa, of your possessiom and other ter- ritories to any of tlicm belonging or pertaining. and of your Empire of India. according to their re- spective laws and customs?" King: "I solcmnly promise so to do." Archbishop: “will you to your power cause lmv and justice. in mercy. to be executed in all your judgments?" King: "I will." Archbishop: "will you to the ut- most of your power maintain the laws of Cod and the truc pro- fOSiOn of tho Gospel will you to the utmost of your power mfiintain ln the United Kingdom thc Pro. testant reformed rcliginn establish- ed by law? And will mu maintain and preserve lnvlolably the settle- ment of the church of England, and the doctrine. worship, dis- cipline and govcrnmout thereof, as by law estnblishcd in England‘? and wllii you ))I'(‘:(‘I‘\'Q unto the bishops and clergy of Elgzland: and to the churches thcre committed to their charge. all such rights and privileges. as by law do or shall appertaln to thcni. or any of them?‘ King: "all this I promise to do." Takes Solemn Oath Then the King. arising out of his chair, supported as before m4 assisted by the Lord Great. Chamberlain. Um sword of state carried before him. went to the altar and tlhcrc, uncovcrcd. made his vlcmn oath. placing his right hand upon the Holy Gospel in the great Bible. saying these words: "The things which I have here before promised. I will perform and keep. So help me God“. Whcreaftcr the King kissed the book and signed the oath. At the administration of the oath. loud speakers carried the King's affirmations all over the Abbey. It was noticed His Maj- esty responded readily. hflDDY Proof he has largely conquered his tcn- dency towards hesitancy of speech. Following the singing of "Zadok the Priest". which heralded the anointing. the King rose from his devotions. The Lord Great Chan-i- berlaln divested him of his crim- son robe. and the Cap of State was removed from his head. Anglioaniun oaued than upon the i L j The King silt (l0Wli ill King Ed. Ward's Cllflll‘ iplllccd ili ilic nudn of the urea over against llll‘ altar, with the fnldstool bclorl- u» when he was to be anoinlcd. Four knights of tho giu-tci" hold over him l1 rich pnll of hllk. o; cloth of gold; llli‘ Uvilll of west. minster. taking ill!‘ linlpulla and spoon from the illilll". hcld tlicm ready. pouring the holy oil mm the spoon. and with u. the Arch. bishop anointed tho Kim: in the form of a cross. saying: “Be tlly hands nnolulcrl with holy oil." On the breast. sriyintz: “Be thy breast anoiutcrl with __————~—__. -_i—r_~;..~.~¢—.—il (Continued on page 5i A WINK FROM IIESPER A wink from Hcspci". ia ling Fast. in the wintry sky. Comes through the own blue. . Dear. like a word from you . . I Is it good-bye? l Across the miles betwccn us 1 send you sigh for Sll-Ill l good‘ Good-night. sweet flicud, night: Till lfe and all take flight. 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